Actually ARIN rules don't say anything about bankruptcy. However, in the event 
that
the organization ceases to exist and there is no successor organization taking 
over
the network infrastructure under an 8.2 transfer, yes, the resources would 
revert to
ARIN.

The only other (legitimate) possibility is a section 8.3 transfer (which would 
require
approval by ARIN also).

In both an 8.2 and an 8.3 transfer, the recipient organization has to show 
justified need.
The collection of blocks in question does not sound like it would be permitted 
under 8.3,
so, perhaps Micr0$0ft is also acquiring part of Nortel's operations that are 
using those
addresses as well.

Owen


Sent from my iPad

On Mar 24, 2011, at 9:27 AM, "Aaron Wendel"<aa...@wholesaleinternet.net> wrote:

> That's a good question.  Maybe they can't qualify under Arin rules.  Another 
> question will be: how is Arin going to handle it?
> 
> Im pretty sure that the RSA says that in the event of bankruptcy ips revert 
> to the Arin pool.  I understand that these were legacy addresses but.......
> 
> Aaron
> 
> Sent via DROID on Verizon Wireless
> 
> -----Original message-----
> From: Leo Bicknell <bickn...@ufp.org>
> To: nanog@nanog.org
> Sent: Thu, Mar 24, 2011 14:08:21 GMT+00:00
> Subject: Re: Nortel, in bankruptcy, sells IPv4 address block for $7.5 million
> 
> In a message written on Thu, Mar 24, 2011 at 09:32:21AM -0400, Bret Clark 
> wrote:
>> Why would Microsoft need this many IP's? I could see the benefitingservice 
>> providers much more.
> 
> I think the more interesting question is why would Microsoft pay
> $7.5 million for something they can, at least for the moment, get
> for free.
> 
> -- 
>      Leo Bicknell - bickn...@ufp.org - CCIE 3440
>       PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/
> 

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